I.M. Marsh Campus Explained

IM Marsh Campus
Established:1900 as Liverpool Physical Training College
Closed:July 2021
Type:Public
Coor:53.3702°N -2.9206°W
City:Liverpool
State:England
Country:United Kingdom
Campus:former Urban
Website:https://www.ljmu.ac.uk/study/undergraduate-students/visit-us/directions/im-marsh (former LJMU)

The IM Marsh Campus is a former university campus in south Liverpool. It was, until 2021, home to the School of Education, Leisure and Sport Studies and the School of Teacher Education and Professional Learning (both part of the Faculty of Education, Health and Community (EHC)), of Liverpool John Moores University.

It formerly housed the majority of the university's sporting facilities including: sports hall, two gymnasiums, fitness suite, climbing wall, tennis courts, hockey astroturf and three large playing fields.[1] All the facilities were operated by Marsh Sports.

History

The Liverpool Gymnasium College, later the Liverpool Physical Training College, was founded in 1900 by Irene Mabel Marsh (hence the IM Marsh Campus) as a physical education teacher training college for women.[2] [3] It was initially at a site at 110 Bedford Street, expanding into adjacent buildings, until Irene Marsh bought Barkhill House in 1919.[4] It was renamed the I.M. Marsh College of Physical Education in 1947, and became co-educational in 1987. The campus briefly became part of the University of Liverpool, until being transferred in 1981 to Liverpool Polytechnic which later became Liverpool John Moores University.

Location

Based in the green suburb of Aigburth in south Liverpool approximately four miles from the city centre, it was the only LJMU campus outside of the city centre. It is well connected to the city and the rest of the United Kingdom through three local train stations (Aigburth Station, Mossley Hill Station and West Allerton Station), several bus routes operated by Merseytravel, and Liverpool John Lennon Airport.

Former facilities

Notable former students and staff

2011 and on

On 30 March 2011, LJMU announced their intention to sell the campus and relocate the faculty to the city centre.[6] This has had the foreseeable effect of rendering it as not as up to date as other LJMU campuses, as funding has not kept up with that of other campuses.

In 2022 the Bark Hill villa was saved from demolition after it was listed.[7]

References

  1. Web site: Sport facilities. 2020-08-15. www.ljmu.ac.uk. en.
  2. Web site: I.M. Marsh College of Physical Training . Liverpool John Moores University . 30 April 2023.
  3. Web site: Pioneering physical education. 2020-08-15. www.ljmu.ac.uk. en.
  4. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography . 2004-09-23 . ref:odnb/93053 . Matthew . H. C. G. . Oxford . 10.1093/ref:odnb/93053 . 2022-11-24 . Harrison . B. . Goldman . L..
  5. News: Bidding begins on 'entire life'. BBC News. 22 June 2008 . 20 August 2013.
  6. Web site: IM Marsh. LJMU News Update. LJMU. 2011-03-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20111110083218/http://ljmu.ac.uk/NewsUpdate/index_118000.htm. 10 November 2011. dead.
  7. Web site: Graham . Patrick . 2022-02-04 . IM Marsh Campus historic building saved from demolition . 2022-11-24 . Liverpool Echo . en.

External links